pigeonsmasher
pigeonsmasher t1_j7xunj1 wrote
Reply to comment by BurninCrab in Manhattan rents hit an all-time high in January by WarrenBuffetsDriver
Not if demand outpaces it
pigeonsmasher t1_j7nvbrb wrote
Something went wrong here. Not the norm. Fake news.
pigeonsmasher t1_j6wzi34 wrote
Reply to George Santos' campaign spent more than $26,000 at an Italian restaurant in Queens. That's enough to buy 1,131 orders of the rigatoni bolognese. by MrKleen10
He’s buying wine not fuckin rigatoni
pigeonsmasher t1_iyrn3mp wrote
It looks like São Paulo belongs in “colorful” vs “highly skewed”?
And what does “highly efficient” mean?
pigeonsmasher t1_ixezayv wrote
Reply to comment by sysyphusishappy in New School makes “final offer” to striking part-time faculty in New York City by DrogDrill
It probably happens, but I don’t know any adjuncts that are cruising by on their parents’ money. Or any that I would even suspect of that. Almost all of them are over 40, for one. Everyone is gigging, has a breadwinner spouse, or is a bored retiree.
pigeonsmasher t1_ixey2ah wrote
Reply to comment by johnniewelker in New School makes “final offer” to striking part-time faculty in New York City by DrogDrill
Right, the research and publishing is where the rest of that money is “earned.” For however valuable that is.
pigeonsmasher t1_ixeukv2 wrote
Reply to comment by johnniewelker in New School makes “final offer” to striking part-time faculty in New York City by DrogDrill
I’ve been there for awhile but I believe the starting rate is still $60-70 per hour, 3 hours per week per class, for 16 weeks. So that comes out to something like $3500 per course.
I’m not sure how much full-time faculty are making—north of $60k a year, not sure by how much. Typical courseload is 6 per year AFAIK. So that comes out to $10k per course. It might be 8 per year/$7500 per course.
The workload is virtually the same, which is the cause of much uproar across departments. Even the full timers generally agree and are vocal about the disparity.
pigeonsmasher t1_ixe8vko wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in New School makes “final offer” to striking part-time faculty in New York City by DrogDrill
University admins who set their own salary, make more than teachers, and create little value for the university
pigeonsmasher t1_ixdn2me wrote
I teach part-time at CUNY. I don’t think people, especially students and parents, understand how bad this situation has become. The wages and organizational structure really are abysmal. We’re talking like $200-300 a week in the worst cases, and that’s only for the 30-32 weeks class is in session. Profs get second jobs, gradually those second jobs become first jobs, and teaching becomes an afterthought. Meanwhile some talentless paper shuffler is collecting six figures and funding a comfy lifestyle in Jersey while contributing zero benefit to the students subsidizing them.
pigeonsmasher t1_ixb2h4c wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in It's a Miracle Your Favorite Local Bar Still Exists by troxwalt
You spelled Sisyphus wrong there Nick Fuentes
pigeonsmasher t1_ixb0517 wrote
So even without covid restrictions, this business is only pulling in $56,000 a month in lower Manhattan? That’s less than $2000 a day. God bless ‘em but I’d say that’s probably not a good business.
Is this normal? I managed a restaurant in midtown in 2009-2012 that made about 3x this and we didn’t even have a liquor license.
pigeonsmasher t1_iu1usc2 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [OC] Racial breakdown of students at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT, Stanford compared to students scoring 1400+ on the SAT by tabthough
That is incorrect
pigeonsmasher t1_ja5bayh wrote
Reply to comment by HS_HowCan_That_BeQM in How far off are we from not needing to learn languages? by AmericanMonsterCock
There’s nothing esoteric about learning idioms. Amazon immediately turned up several books worth of German-English idiom translations. I learned dozens of Russian idioms in college and I barely paid attention. Especially considering it’s a language tool, idioms have got to be some of the first things it learned